Capacitor structure of capacitive touch panel

ABSTRACT

A capacitor structure of capacitive touch panel including a first electrode layer, a first material layer, a second material layer and a second electrode layer is provided. The first material layer is disposed on the first electrode layer, and the material of the first material layer is selected from one of a semiconductor material and an insulating material. The second material layer is disposed on the first material layer, and the material of the second material layer is selected from another one of the semiconductor material and the insulating material. The second electrode layer is disposed on the second material layer.

CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATION

This application claims the priority benefit of Taiwan applicationserial no. 101132861, filed on Sep. 7, 2012. The entirety of theabove-mentioned patent application is hereby incorporated by referenceherein and made a part of this specification.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

1. Field of the Invention

The invention generally relates to a component structure of touch panel,and more particularly, to a capacitor structure of capacitive touchpanel.

2. Description of Related Art

Along with the development of touch panels, the touch panel has beenbroadly applied in the screens of electronic apparatuses such as mobilephone, notebook or tablet computer. The touch panel enables a user moreconveniently inputting or manipulating with the electronic apparatusesand makes the user interface more user-friend and easily to operate.

In general, the touch panel can be divided into resistive touch panel,capacitive touch panel, acoustic touch panel, optical touch panel orelectromagnetic touch panel according to the structure and sensingmethod thereof. For a capacitive touch panel, the electrode structurethereof includes a plurality of receiving electrodes and a plurality ofdriving electrodes. In the application practice, the driving electrodeis configured to receive the driving signal input by the panel so thatthe touch panel is driven to sense the touching action of the user. Thereceiving electrode is configured to produce a sensed signalcorresponding to the touching action of the user. However, thecapacitive touch panel today is adapted only to the direct touchingaction of the user, but unable to work for using remote operation way ornon-touch operation way.

In addition, in terms of an optical touch panel, although it can work byusing remote operation way or non-touch operation way, but the currentoptical touch panel mostly adopts a built-in architecture, i.e., theoptical sensor is directly buried on a thin film transistor (TFT) panelor a color filter panel (CFP), which must occupies a certain area ofpixels and affects the aperture ratio of the panel.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

Accordingly, the invention is directed to a capacitor structure ofcapacitive touch panel, which has both the capacitive touch function andoptical touch function.

The invention provides a capacitor structure of capacitive touch panel,which includes a first electrode layer, a first material layer, a secondmaterial layer and a second electrode layer. The first material layer isdisposed on the first electrode layer, and the material of the firstmaterial layer is selected from one of a semiconductor material and aninsulating material. The second material layer is disposed on the firstmaterial layer, and the material of the second material layer isselected from another one of the semiconductor material and theinsulating material. The second electrode layer is disposed on thesecond material layer.

In an embodiment of the present invention, the material of theabove-mentioned second material layer is selected from semiconductormaterial and a width on a first direction of the second electrode layerdisposed on the second material layer is less than a width on the firstdirection of the second material layer.

In an embodiment of the present invention, the above-mentioned secondelectrode layer is arranged on the first direction.

In an embodiment of the present invention, the material of theabove-mentioned first material layer is selected from semiconductormaterial and a width on a second direction of the first electrode layerdisposed under the first material layer is less than a width on thesecond direction of the first material layer.

In an embodiment of the present invention, the above-mentioned firstelectrode layer is arranged on the second direction.

In an embodiment of the present invention, the above-mentionedsemiconductor material is a metal oxide semiconductor (MOS).

In an embodiment of the present invention, during an irradiation, acapacitor of depletion region of the first material layer or secondmaterial layer made of semiconductor material is produced according to abias of the capacitor structure.

In an embodiment of the present invention, during the irradiation, alight source provides the capacitor structure with a light and aflashing frequency of the light source is greater than a thresholdfrequency.

In an embodiment of the present invention, the above-mentioned firstelectrode layer and second electrode layer are configured to receive anAC signal to be operated in a periodic polarity-reversal mode.

Based on the depiction above, in the embodiments of the invention, thesemiconductor material layers of the touch panel have two touch controlsof optical triggering and finger touch triggering and therefore thecapacitive touch panel of the disclosure has both the capacitive touchfunction and the optical touch function.

Other objectives, features and advantages of the present invention willbe further understood from the further technological features disclosedby the embodiments of the present invention wherein there are shown anddescribed preferred embodiments of this invention, simply by way ofillustration of modes best suited to carry out the invention.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

FIG. 1 is a top-view diagram of an electrode structure of a capacitivetouch panel according to an embodiment of the invention.

FIG. 2 is a cross-sectional diagram of the capacitor structure of thecapacitive touch panel in the embodiment of FIG. 1.

FIG. 3 is a three-dimensional diagram of a capacitor structure of acapacitive touch panel according to another embodiment of the invention.

FIG. 4 is a top-view diagram of the capacitor structure of thecapacitive touch panel in the embodiment of FIG. 3.

FIG. 5 is a schematic diagram showing the periodic polarity-reversalmode in which the first electrode layer and the second electrode layerin an embodiment of the invention.

FIG. 6 is a schematic diagram showing the periodic variation of thecapacitance of depletion region disappears according to an embodiment ofthe invention during an irradiation.

FIG. 7 is a schematic diagram showing that the capacitor of depletionregion of the semiconductor layers according to an embodiment of theinvention during an irradiation produces a displacement current due tothe irradiation.

DESCRIPTION OF THE EMBODIMENTS

The capacitive touch panel of the disclosure is similar to the hardwarearchitecture of the conventional capacitive touch panel and is able torealize at least both the capacitive touch function and the opticaltouch function. In comparison with the conventional capacitive touchpanel, the capacitive touch panel of the disclosure has an additionalsemiconductor layer so that the process of the capacitive touch panel ofthe disclosure is not much different from the process of theconventional one. The material selection of the semiconductor layer musttake the transparency in consideration. In fact, the criticalconsideration criteria is that the band-gap of the material must begreater than or slightly less than the photon energy of the visiblelight. During the optical touching operation, an AC signal can bedirectly produced on the touch panel or added into the received light.When the semiconductor layer absorbs the light from the touch panel orthe ambient, the light with modulation is helpful to interpretation ofthe touch panel. For better understanding the invention, an embodimentin association with figures are explained in following.

FIG. 1 is a top-view diagram of an electrode structure of a capacitivetouch panel according to an embodiment of the invention. Referring toFIG. 1, a capacitive touch panel 100 with a set of 3×4 electrodes isgiven. The capacitive touch panel 100 has two regions: a driving regionincluding a plurality of driving electrodes 110 and a receiving regionincluding a plurality of receiving electrodes 120. Within the drivingregion, the same columns X1-X3 respectively have four driving electrodes110 in quadrilateral shapes. Within the receiving region, the same rowsY1-Y4 respectively have three receiving electrodes 120 in quadrilateralshapes. It should be noted that the rows and columns herein are definedreferring to the array direction of FIG. 1 and the terminologies ofcolumn and row are to describe, not to limit, the invention.

FIG. 2 is a cross-sectional diagram of the capacitor structure of thecapacitive touch panel in the embodiment of FIG. 1. Referring to FIGS. 1and 2, the capacitive touch panel 100 in the embodiment includes aplurality of staggered connected capacitor structures 200 and thecross-sectional diagram thereof is shown by FIG. 2. The capacitorstructure 200 serves as a portion of the capacitive touch panel 100 andis disposed on an LCD panel 300 so as to execute touching and sensingfunctions together with the LCD panel 300.

In more details, the capacitor structure 200 of the embodiment includesa first electrode layer 110, a first material layer 130, a secondmaterial layer 140 and a second electrode layer 120. The first materiallayer 130 is disposed on the first electrode layer 110, and the materialof the first material layer 130 is selected from one of a semiconductormaterial and an insulating material. The second material layer 140 isdisposed on the first material layer 130, and the material of the secondmaterial layer 140 is selected from another one of the semiconductormaterial and the insulating material. The second electrode layer 120 isdisposed on the second material layer 140. In the embodiment, thematerial of the first material layer 130 is semiconductor material whichincludes metal oxide semiconductor (MOS), for example, indium galliumzinc oxide (IGZO) or hafnium indium zinc oxide (HIZO), which theinvention is not limited to. In another embodiment, the first materiallayer 130 is made of semiconductor material and the second materiallayer 140 is made of insulating material. In other words, one of schemesof the disclosure rests in that the two electrode layers include notonly insulating layer, but also semiconductor layer. Therefore, thestacking sequence of the insulating layer and the semiconductor layerare not to limit the invention and different stacking sequence does notaffect the electrical characteristic of the capacitor structure ofcapacitive touch panel. In the embodiment, the first electrode layer 110and the second electrode layer 120 are made of, for example, atransparent semiconductor of indium tin oxide (ITO), which the inventionis not limited to.

In following, the second material layer 140 is, for example, asemiconductor layer to explain the operation principle of thedisclosure. In the embodiment, the second material layer 140 can form adepletion region under an appropriate bias and the depletion region isjust like an insulating layer under a voltage with some AC frequencies.In other words, an applied appropriate bias depending on the applicationpractice enables the second material layer 140 producing a capacitor Csof the depletion region and the whole capacitance of the capacitorstructure 200 is the result in series connection of a capacitor Cox ofthe insulating layer and the capacitor Cs of the depletion region. Inaddition, the another feature of the second material layer 140 is it canabsorb photons of visible light or ultraviolet (UV) to produceelectron-hole pairs. The electrons and the holes are separated by anelectrical field in the depletion region to produce a new electricalfield so as to make the energy band structure of the second materiallayer 140 even. That is to say, the irradiation can eliminate thedepletion region of the second material layer 140 so as to eliminate thecapacitor Cs of the depletion region. In the embodiment, the wholecapacitances of the capacitor structure 200 before and after theirradiation has a difference of a capacitance Cs of the depletion regiontherebetween. When the material of the second material layer 140 in thecapacitor structure 200 is metal oxide semiconductor (MOS) of indiumgallium zinc oxide (IGZO), for the capacitor structures 200 respectivelywith depletion region (at the time, Cox and Cs is in series connection)and without the depletion region (at the time, there is Cox only), thedifference of the whole capacitances can be four times, i.e., 4:1. Inthis way, the capacitor structure 200 of the embodiment can providesufficient capacitance variation for distinguishing the states of thetouch panel 100.

FIG. 3 is a three-dimensional diagram of a capacitor structure of acapacitive touch panel according to another embodiment of the inventionand FIG. 4 is a top-view diagram of the capacitor structure of thecapacitive touch panel in the embodiment of FIG. 3. Referring to FIGS. 3and 4, each of a plurality of capacitor structures 400 of the embodimentat least includes a first electrode layer 410, a first material layer430, a second material layer 440 and a second electrode layer 420, inwhich the stacking relations between the structure layers are shown byFIG. 3, which is omitted to describe. In the embodiment, the secondmaterial layer 440 is a semiconductor layer arranged on the firstdirection D1, while the first material layer 430 is an insulating layerarranged on the second direction D2. For simplicity, in FIG. 3, only onefirst material layer 430 is shown and the arrangement thereof on thesecond direction D2 is analogy to the arrangement of the second materiallayer 440 on the first direction D1.

In the embodiment, in each of the capacitor structures 400 of the touchpanel 100, the second material layer 440 and first material layer 430are sandwiched by the first electrode layer 410 and the second electrodelayer 420. The second electrode layer 420 contacts, but not necessarilyentire contacts, the second material layer 440. In other words, thewidth W1 on the first direction D1 of the second electrode layer 420disposed on the second material layer 440 is less than the width W2 onthe first direction D1 of the second material layer 440, which theinvention is not limited to. In other embodiments, the second electrodelayer 420 can entire contact the second material layer 440 and at thetime, the width W1 is equal to the width W2. In the design where thewidth W1 is less than the width W2, the MOS semiconductor is easier tobe processed.

In another embodiment, the first material layer 430 is a semiconductorlayer, while the second material layer 440 is an insulating layer. Withthe implementation, the width on the second direction D2 of the firstelectrode layer 410 disposed under the first material layer 430 is lessthan the width on the second direction D2 of the first material layer430, and the detail thereof can be analogy to the relation between thesecond electrode layer 420 and the second electrode layer 420.

Generally, the interface between the semiconductor layer and theinsulating layer easily captures electrons or holes, in which thephysical phenomenon of the interface is similar to the physicalphenomenon of the interface between the semiconductor layer and theinsulating layer made of MOS. The threshold voltage of such MOS can bedifferent depending on the applied electrical field. In addition, forsuch MOS structure, the threshold voltages before and after theirradiation are somehow different. When removing the irradiation, thedepletion region of the semiconductor layer is not necessarily returnedto the width before the irradiation. Therefore, at least to avoid theinconsistent widths of the depletion region before and after theirradiation, a positive bias is applied between the gate and the sourceof the MOS, which can increase the threshold voltage to resume the widthof the depletion region to make the widths of the depletion regionbefore and after the irradiation consistent.

In the embodiment of FIG. 3 therefore, the first electrode layer 410 andthe second electrode layer 420 receive an AC signal to be operated in aperiodic polarity-reversal mode, as shown by FIG. 5. The AC signalherein means when the first electrode layer 410 is applied by a positivebias +V, the second electrode layer 420 is applied by a negative bias−V. On the contrary, when the first electrode layer 410 is applied by anegative bias −V, the second electrode layer 420 is applied by apositive bias +V. In the periodic polarity-reversal mode, the width ofthe depletion region of the second electrode layer 420 is maintained andnot varied with the irradiation. In the angle of view of the capacitorCs of the depletion region, the difference between with irradiation andwithout irradiation rests in that the periodic variation of thecapacitor Cs of the depletion region disappears, as shown by FIG. 6.

In the embodiment of the invention, to avoid misjudgement of the touchpanel 100 on the non-triggering light in the optical touch mode thelight signal of the light source of the touch panel 100 is withmodulation. In more details, it should be noted that the capacitor Cs ofthe depletion region of the embodiment is more sensitive on thenon-triggering light such as the light from the touch panel or theambient. The modulation method of the signal of the light source in theembodiment is, for example, making the light source after the modulationhas a flashing frequency f greater than the threshold value and therebyproviding a corresponding light to irradiate the capacitor structure ofthe capacitive touch panel. The scheme is shown by FIG. 7, which showsthat the capacitor Cs of depletion region of the semiconductor layers inan embodiment of the invention during an irradiation produces adisplacement current. In FIG. 7, the capacitor Cs of the depletionregion is irradiated by a light Ls with the flashing frequency f,wherein the flashing frequency f is greater than the threshold frequencyfor triggering the optical control. As a result, the capacitor Cs of thedepletion region accordingly produces the displacement current Is withthe same frequency for the touch panel 100 to read, which can avoid themisjudgement of the touch panel 100 on the non-triggering light in theoptical touch mode.

In summary, the embodiments of the invention at least have one of thefollowing advantages. The capacitive touch panel includes asemiconductor layer with both touch control functions of opticaltriggering and finger touch triggering. The voltage between the twoelectrodes of the touch panel can be periodically reversed to maintainthe capacitance of the depletion region. In addition, in the opticaltouch mode, the triggering light can be modulated into the light with aspecific frequency able to enhance the judgement capability on thesignal of the touch panel. In this way, the capacitive touch panel ofthe disclosure has both the capacitive touch function and the opticaltouch function.

It will be apparent to those skilled in the art that the descriptionsabove are several preferred embodiments of the invention only, whichdoes not limit the implementing range of the invention. Variousmodifications and variations can be made to the structure of theinvention without departing from the scope or spirit of the invention.The claim scope of the invention is defined by the claims hereinafter.

What is claimed is:
 1. A capacitor structure of capacitive touch panel,comprising: a first electrode layer; a first material layer, disposed onthe first electrode layer, wherein a material of the first materiallayer is selected from one of a semiconductor material and an insulatingmaterial; a second material layer, disposed on the first material layer,wherein a material of the second material layer s selected from anotherone of the semiconductor material and the insulating material; and asecond electrode layer, disposed on the second material layer, whereinduring an irradiation, a light source provides the capacitor structurewith a light selected from one of a visible light and an ultravioletlight, and a flashing frequency of the light source is greater than athreshold frequency for triggering an optical control.
 2. The capacitorstructure of capacitive touch panel as claimed in claim 1, wherein thematerial of the second material layer is selected from semiconductormaterial and a width on a first direction of the second electrode layerdisposed on the second material layer is less than a width on the firstdirection of the second material layer.
 3. The capacitor structure ofcapacitive touch panel as claimed in claim 1, wherein the secondelectrode layer is arranged on a first direction.
 4. The capacitorstructure of capacitive touch panel as claimed in claim 1, wherein thematerial of the first material layer is selected from semiconductormaterial and a width on a second direction of the first electrode layerdisposed under the first material layer is less than a width on thesecond direction of the first material layer.
 5. The capacitor structureof capacitive touch panel as claimed in claim 4, wherein the firstelectrode layer is arranged on the second direction.
 6. The capacitorstructure of capacitive touch panel as claimed in claim 1, wherein thesemiconductor material is a metal oxide semiconductor.
 7. The capacitorstructure of capacitive touch panel as claimed in claim 1, whereinduring the irradiation, a capacitor of depletion region of the firstmaterial layer or second material layer made of semiconductor materialis produced according to a bias of the capacitor structure.
 8. Thecapacitor structure of capacitive touch panel as claimed in claim 1,wherein the first electrode layer and the second electrode layer areconfigured to receive an AC signal to be operated in a periodicpolarity-reversal mode.